
#ClarityActFinalStretch
About ClarityActFinalStretch
200+ crypto firms including Coinbase, Ripple, Kraken, a16z, and Circle signed an open letter urging the Senate to bring the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act to a full vote. The bill passed the Senate Banking Committee 15-9 bipartisan; Sen. Lummis says it's "on the 5-yard line." The House Ways and Means Committee held hearings on 7 crypto tax proposals: de minimis exemptions, staking income rules, stablecoin payments, and Wash Sale reform. Both chambers now moving in sync.
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#ClarityActFinalStretch The US Crypto Bill Is Closer Than It's Ever Been
200+ firms across trading, VC, and payments infrastructure just signed an open letter calling on the Senate to bring the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act to a full floor vote. The names on that letter read like a who's who of the industry. The bill already cleared the Senate Banking Committee 15-9 on a bipartisan vote, and Sen. Lummis is publicly calling it "on the 5-yard line."
Simultaneously, the House Ways and Means Committee ran hearings on seven crypto tax proposals: de minimis exemptions for small transactions, staking income treatment, stablecoin payment rules, and Wash Sale reform. That last one is significant. The current Wash Sale exemption is one of the main ways crypto is treated differently from equities, and changing it would reshape how a lot of traders and funds manage their books.
What stands out isn't any single move. It's the synchronization. Both chambers are moving at the same time, with industry coalitions applying coordinated pressure. That alignment is rare in DC, and it suggests this cycle may actually be different from the attempts that died in committee before.
Whether the final bill survives floor amendments and election-year scheduling is still an open question.
But the infrastructure for a real vote is in place in a way it genuinely hasn't been before.
Is this the regulatory clarity moment the industry has been pushing for, or another near-miss?
Share your thoughts in the comments 👇
$BTC $ZEC $HYPE

💵 #USCryptoTaxReform
Mass adoption doesn't happen when technology improves.
It happens when friction disappears.
One of the biggest barriers to everyday crypto usage has always been taxation.
Imagine buying coffee with crypto and having to calculate capital gains for every transaction.
That's not a payment system.
That's an accounting nightmare.
The growing conversation around crypto tax reform is attempting to solve exactly that problem by reducing the compliance burden for small everyday transactions and encouraging real-world use cases. While proposals remain under discussion, the broader direction is clear: policymakers are increasingly recognizing that tax frameworks designed for investments may not work well for payments.
If meaningful reform occurs:
✅ Easier adoption
✅ Greater consumer usage
✅ More merchant acceptance
✅ Less administrative complexity
But there are also questions:
⚠️ How large should exemptions be?
⚠️ How do regulators prevent abuse?
⚠️ How do governments balance innovation with revenue collection?
The most important shift isn't technical.
It's psychological.
People use systems that are simple.
The easier crypto becomes to spend, save, and integrate into daily life, the closer it moves from speculative asset to practical financial tool.
The next phase of crypto growth may not come from another token.
It may come from better rules. $BTC $ETH $ZEC
#USCryptoTaxReform Crypto tax policy in the United States may be approaching its most significant update in years.
The House Ways and Means Committee has circulated seven digital asset tax reform proposals covering key areas including small crypto transactions, mining and staking income, stablecoin payments, and Wash Sale rules. A formal hearing is scheduled for June 10.
Two proposals are attracting the most attention.
The first would introduce a small transaction tax exemption, potentially reducing reporting requirements for everyday crypto payments. If adopted, this could remove a major friction point that has limited the use of digital assets for routine transactions.
The second, the Mining and Staking Tax Clarity Act, aims to establish the first comprehensive framework for taxing staking and mining rewards. Clear guidance has long been one of the most requested policy changes from DeFi participants, validators, and long-term staking users.
For years, regulatory uncertainty has remained one of the largest barriers to broader digital asset adoption. While these proposals are still in the discussion phase, they signal a growing shift toward clearer and more practical crypto tax treatment in the world’s largest financial market.
June 10 could become an important date for the future of crypto taxation in the United States.
Markets will be watching closely.
#HYPEETFInflows
$BTC $ETH
@OKX Orbit
The US government just changed the rules for every crypto holder 😳
And most people have NO idea this already happened 👇
Here's everything changing under #USCryptoTaxReform 🧵
📋 The IRS just launched Form 1099-DA — your exchange NOW automatically reports ALL your crypto trades directly to the government
📋 Every wallet is now tracked separately — you can't mix cost basis across wallets anymore
📋 Short term gains taxed at up to 37% — same as your salary 😰
📋 Long term gains taxed at 0%, 15% or 20% — MUCH better if you hold over 1 year
BUT here's the GOOD NEWS nobody is talking about 👇
✅ The PARITY Act just passed — stablecoin transactions under $200 are now TAX FREE
✅ 5 year tax deferral on staking and mining rewards 🚀
✅ Institutional money surged $87 BILLION into crypto because of this clarity 💰
✅ The US is finally treating crypto like a REAL asset class 💎
This is actually BULLISH for crypto long term 📈
The more regulated crypto becomes — the more institutions invest — the higher prices go
Here's the simple rule to never pay more tax than you need to 👇
⭐ Hold over 1 year = pay 15-20% max
⭐ Sell under 1 year = pay up to 37%
⭐ Use stablecoins under $200 = pay ZERO tax
Are you aware of these new rules? 👇
Not financial advice or tax advice 🙏
#USCryptoTaxReform #Bitcoin #BTC #OKXOrbiter #Crypto2026 #Web3 #PARITY

The US CLARITY Act passed the House 294–134 in July 2025 — a strong bipartisan signal. In 2026, the Senate Banking Committee approved it 15–9 on May 14, and the Senate Agriculture Committee advanced a companion bill on January 29. The two committee versions still need reconciliation before a full Senate floor vote. It's the final legislative stretch, but it's not law yet.
The CLARITY Act would formally define which crypto assets are securities vs. commodities, resolving the years-long SEC vs. CFTC jurisdictional fight. If it passes, it changes the compliance calculus for every exchange, protocol, and institutional player in the US market. BTC at $62.9K is operating without this certainty — a confirmed path to passage would be one of the most structurally bullish catalysts of the year for US crypto adoption.
Does the CLARITY Act passing change how much capital you'd put into US-accessible crypto assets?
Just sharing my thoughts. Not financial advice. DYOR.
#ClarityActFinalStretch #USCryptoTaxReform #OKXOrbit
🇺🇸 Crypto Regulation Update
U.S. House Republicans have introduced 7 draft bills focused on digital asset taxation.
The proposals cover staking, mining, stablecoins, small crypto transactions, and clearer tax treatment for digital assets.
If approved, these measures could bring more regulatory clarity and support broader crypto adoption in the U.S.

💵 #USCryptoTaxReform
Mass adoption doesn't happen when technology improves.
It happens when friction disappears.
One of the biggest barriers to everyday crypto usage has always been taxation.
Imagine buying coffee with crypto and having to calculate capital gains for every transaction.
That's not a payment system.
That's an accounting nightmare.
The growing conversation around crypto tax reform is attempting to solve exactly that problem by reducing the compliance burden for small everyday transactions and encouraging real-world use cases. While proposals remain under discussion, the broader direction is clear: policymakers are increasingly recognizing that tax frameworks designed for investments may not work well for payments.
If meaningful reform occurs:
✅ Easier adoption
✅ Greater consumer usage
✅ More merchant acceptance
✅ Less administrative complexity
But there are also questions:
⚠️ How large should exemptions be?
⚠️ How do regulators prevent abuse?
⚠️ How do governments balance innovation with revenue collection?
The most important shift isn't technical.
It's psychological.
People use systems that are simple.
The easier crypto becomes to spend, save, and integrate into daily life, the closer it moves from speculative asset to practical financial tool.
The next phase of crypto growth may not come from another token.
It may come from better rules. $BTC $ETH $ZEC
#USCryptoTaxReform The US Just Got Serious About Crypto Tax. Read the Fine Print.
Seven crypto tax bills hit the House Ways and Means Committee ahead of this week's hearing. The headline items sound like wins. Two actually are. One is a trap.
The staking deferral is the real deal. Under current rules, stakers owe income tax on rewards the moment they're received, even if the token drops 80% before they can sell. The Tax Clarity for Mining and Staking Act defers that liability to point of sale, fixing a phantom income problem that's pushed serious validators offshore for years. For stakers, it's the most impactful item in this package.
The de minimis provisions are more nuanced. Stablecoin payments under $200 get a clean exemption, genuinely cutting compliance friction for everyday crypto spending. The gas fee carve-out is narrower: fees under $10, capped at 5,000 transactions per year. Regular DeFi users will hit that cap fast.
Then there's wash sale. If crypto gets folded into standard wash sale rules, the tax-loss harvesting play, selling at a loss and immediately rebuying, disappears overnight. CT has been quiet on this one. It shouldn't be.
These are drafts, not law. But the direction is clear: the US is building a real framework, and it cuts both ways.
Which of these changes matters most to your on-chain activity?
Share your thoughts in the comments 👇

The House Ways and Means Committee is circulating seven digital asset tax discussion drafts in 2026, covering stablecoins, mining, staking, lending, and the wash-sale loophole. The bipartisan PARITY Act would defer staking taxes up to 5 years, eliminate capital gains on stablecoin payments under $200, and close the wash-sale rule. 2026 is also the first mandatory 1099-DA reporting year from centralized exchanges.
The wash-sale closure is the one to watch — it's currently one of crypto's few remaining tax advantages over stocks. But the $200 stablecoin exemption would be enormous for DeFi usability; right now every on-chain swap is technically a taxable event even for stable-to-stable moves. Real reform here could unlock serious on-chain liquidity.
Which part of the crypto tax reform matters most to how you actually invest on-chain?
Just sharing my thoughts. Not financial advice. DYOR.
#USCryptoTaxReform #OKXOrbit
#加密立法两院同步推进
🔥 200 institutions join forces to pressure! The "Clarity Act" is approaching the 5-yard line, tax reform hearings are underway, and the crypto regulatory game point has arrived
Coinbase, Ripple, Kraken, a16z, Circle, plus Binance.US, over 200 crypto institutions have rarely co-signed an open letter, directly delivered to Senate Majority Leader John Thune and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer's desks.
This is not the industry's routine lobbying; it's an open "pressure move." They made it very clear in the letter: the bill will establish a comprehensive federal regulatory framework for digital assets, clarify institutional responsibilities, provide feasible registration pathways, protect software developers, and bring more digital asset activities back to the U.S. The subtext is: if it doesn't pass, people will leave. Circle just relocated its global legal headquarters, and this letter is essentially putting all the chips on the table.
Senator Cynthia Lummis described the bill's progress as "reaching the 5-yard line." The bill passed the Senate Banking Committee on May 14 with a 15-9 vote, with all Republicans voting in favor and two Democrats crossing party lines to support it. It was officially scheduled for the Senate floor on June 3, qualifying for full consideration. However, JPMorgan's assessment poured cold water on this—Congress's schedule tightens before the midterm elections, stablecoin yield controversies remain unresolved, and the time window is very narrow.
Lummis's warning was more direct: if it doesn't pass this year, the next chance might not come until 2030. Disagreements over anti-money laundering provisions, disputes over non-custodial developer exemptions, and conflicts of interest involving former President Trump's crypto investments are the last hurdles blocking the bill.
On the same day, the House Ways and Means Committee held hearings on seven crypto tax reform draft bills, with testimony from Fidelity, Coinbase, and Coin Center. This is the most significant crypto tax adjustment since the IRS classified Bitcoin as "property" in 2014. The seven drafts cover small transaction exemptions, stablecoin tax treatment, deferred taxation on mining and staking rewards, wash sale rules, securities tax rule coordination, and valuation requirements for digital asset charitable donations. Jason Smith chose to advance them separately to build consensus on each provision and avoid a single veto.
The two most watched provisions: first, the small transaction exemption. Under current rules, buying a bottle of water with Bitcoin and gaining even $0.37 in appreciation theoretically counts as a capital gain that must be reported. If the small exemption passes, the compliance burden for everyday payments will be greatly reduced. Second, the mining and staking tax clarity bill, which for the first time establishes deferred tax rules for staking income. Under current rules, validators may owe income tax when receiving token rewards, but by tax time, token prices may have dropped 50%, causing a mismatch of "tax liability without liquidity"; deferring tax until sale could alleviate this issue.
Market pricing hasn't caught up yet. Polymarket prices the probability of the bill becoming law in 2026 at about 60%. A 60% probability event means the regulatory framework and tax reform could land in the same year. Bank opposition, union warnings, anti-money laundering disputes—each is a tough challenge, but the crypto industry's political mobilization ability is no longer what it was years ago. The Senate has a bill at the doorstep, and the House has a full set of tax reform frameworks being built.
A clear federal regulatory framework combined with a reasonable tax reform plan is the real trigger to bring institutional funds from off-exchange into the market. Polymarket's next update should be more worth watching than candlestick signals.
👇 Let's discuss in the comments, do you think the "Clarity Act" will pass this year? Follow me for daily breakdowns of the toughest macro plays.